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Professor Jacco Bomhoff

Professor of Law

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About

About

Jacco Bomhoff is a Professor of Law at LSE Law School. law). The focus of his research is the socio-cultural, historical, and comparative study of legal knowledge. This involves asking how it is that familiar technical and symbolic artefacts and practices of law - its doctrines and concepts, but also its writing formats, its figures of expression, etc. - come to exercise such a powerful hold over the imagination of the actors working with them. But it also includes attention to the wider, world-making roles that 'popular', 'successful', or even hegemonic legal knowledge practices play in modern societies.

At the Law School, Jacco teaches courses on the Conflict of Laws (LLB), Comparative Law, International Commercial Litigation, and Extraterritorial Governance & Global Governance (all LLM).

His publications include the monograph ‘Balancing Constitutional Rights: The Origins and Meanings of Postwar Legal Discourse’ (Cambridge, 2013), and the edited collections ‘The Double-Facing Constitution’ (Cambridge, 2020, with David Dyzenhaus and Thomas Poole), and ‘Practice and Theory in Comparative Law’ (Cambridge 2012, with Maurice Adams).

Jacco has held appointments as a visiting professor at the University of Toronto Faculty of Law, KU Leuven, Université Catholique de Louvain-la-Neuve, Paris II (Panthéon-Assas), and the University of California – San Francisco.